Track Listing 1. Overture: Watermelon City 2. Little More Oil 3. Leech Wisdom 4. No Heathen - (Blacksmith Mix) 5. Musquito - (Club Foot Remix) 6. Bonechip 7. Lonesome Side 8. Flop We 9. Book That Can't Be Opened at Either End, The 10. Dem Nuh Know Me - (Alias-Bias Mix) 11. Taqasim 12. Osaka-Ku Memory Depot 13. Je Suis le Peuple Sans Visage 14. Can't Stop It 15. Leaves 16. Mole in the Ground
| Details | | Contributing Artists: | Ghislain Poirier, Junior Cat, Kit Clayton, Sister Nancy | | Producer: | DJ/Rupture, Kid606, Wayne Lonesome | | Distributor: | Caroline Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Adapters: DJ /rupture; Sindhu Zagoren. Personnel: DJ /rupture (organ); Sindhu Zagoren (vocals, banjo); Elizabeth Alexander, Arnaud Michniak, Wicked Act, Lily, Junior Cat, Mandel Turner, Sister Nancy, Wayne Lonesome, Eugene Robinson (vocals); Joel Robinow (guitar, melodica, trumpet); Abdel Hak (violin); Jenny Jones (cello); Ben Jammin (saxophone); Kit Clayton (Fender Rhodes piano, organ, synthesizer). Audio Remixer: DJ /rupture. Recording information: Calle Mar, Barceloneta; New Haven. Translator: Alan Holding. Arranger: DJ /rupture. Although he made his name with a pair of dense, chaotic mix albums, DJ /rupture's full-length production debut, Special Gunpowder, has holes wide enough to drive a mixing desk through. That's capable of upsetting most /rupture fans, who have looked to the man for the most grinding, fast-paced records to come out in the new millennium. Jace Clayton has interests beyond digital hardcore, though, and most of his listeners have followed him as he's added influences ranging from the most polished of commercial rap to the hardest of ragga dancehall to the most exotic of Middle Eastern music. With all sorts of fans in his pocket, /rupture could have produced any one of a dozen different records, while still satisfying at least segments of his audience. Oddly, Special Gunpowder isn't any of those records; it's no rewrite of Minesweeper Suite with his own productions substituting for those from his crate, it's not a continuation of his fusion mix with Mutamassik from earlier in 2004 (Shotgun Wedding, Vol. 1: The Bidoun Sessions), and it's not even a strictly ragga record -- though he spends more time here with ragga-influenced music than any other form. Special Gunpowder is different because it reflects all of Clayton's widely divergent interests. If he strains at times keeping them all within the same bulging tent, it's still an energized record with intriguing angles that pop out all over. Poet Elizabeth Alexander takes the first track in an unexpected direction, spurting streams of impressionistic vitriol ("Philadelphia is burning and watermelon is all that can cool it") with cut glass in her voice. Many of the tracks that follow lean toward the classic '80s era of dancehall, when skeletal effects matched tough beats and hi-res synthesizers yearned to break through the mix (and often did). For these tracks /rupture calls on an assured and talented array of vocal collaborators (second-wave-of-dancehall figures Sister Nancy and Junior Cat, Wicked Act) and production compatriots (Kid 606, Kit Clayton, Wayne Lonesome). Working farther afield, Eugene Robinson stops by to contribute some of the experimental fire that his band Oxbow possesses, and /rupture uses his album as a pedestal for several ethnic fusion collaborations. (One named "Qadasim" involves Montreal experimental-electronics producer Ghislain Poirier and oud/violin player Abdel Hak, another is the closer, which finds Sindhu Zagoren taking his banjo and voice to the ghostly traditional folk song "I Wish I Was a Mole in the Ground.") No, this isn't the blasted beatscape of Gold Teeth Thief and it's not as immediate a listen as any of DJ /rupture's previous releases. In fact, it may be impossible for anyone except Jace Clayton himself to appreciate every one of the widely divergent tracks here, but Special Gunpowder is a powerful release. ~ John Bush
Editorial Reviews [T]he unremitting diversity of SPECIAL GUNPOWDER - 16 tracks with few if any recurring motifs - is testimony to his restlessness, his curiosity....There's plenty of fizz amid the fizzle. The Wire
4 stars out of 5 - [A] bold genre-fusing hybrid featuring an army of raga MCs, rappers, avant-rockers, French and Arabic folk musicians and more. Uncut
[It] has a distinctly postcolonial approach, tossing together cultures on a musical playing field where nobody's the boss....A heady, beat-centric seminar... - Grade: B+ Entertainment Weekly
On 'Bonechip,' he manages to make indie rap sound more adventurous than it has in five years... - Grade: B+ Spin
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